Review of coronary angiography( CAG), its use in cardiology

From this article you will learn: what is coronary angiography( CAG), indications for its conduct and technique of research. Who appoints and conducts the examination, contraindications to the procedure and possible complications after.

Description of the article:

  • Indications for the procedure
  • Preparation and procedure of
  • What changes are seen in the study of
  • Possible complications of

The peculiarity of coronary angiography, or coronary angiography: it is an invasive diagnostic procedure for the examination of arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle(coronary).It is carried out under sterile conditions of a specialized operating room where a contrast agent( visible in ionizing radiation) is injected into the artery under the control of X-ray equipment.

The main arteries from which the heart is blood is the left and right coronary artery. They are densely branched all over the surface of the myocardium, supplying it completely
. So the coronary arteries look like when they inject a contrast medium. If a site is narrowed and there is no dark line in the picture, the blood flow is blocked
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In clinical cardiology, the study is conducted for several purposes:

  • Detection of pathological changes in coronary vessels in difficult diagnostic cases where there are clinical manifestations of blood flow in the arteries of the heart muscle(ischemic heart disease, or IHD, myocardial ischemia), but other methods of examination do not show it.
  • Assessment of the need, technical feasibility and choice of the method of conducting surgical treatment in patients with established diagnosis of myocardial ischemia.
  • Control after surgical treatment( balloon expansion, stent installation, cardiac bypass grafting) or conservative therapy of IHD.

Based on the results of the procedure, the physician can:

  • determine the presence, location, length and extent of pathological changes in the walls of the coronary vessels;
  • reveal complications of pathology( formation of blood clots, ulceration, ruptures);
  • find out if there is a spasm of the heart arteries;
  • find the parts of the vessels located in the thickness of the heart muscle( myocardial bridges), which should not normally be;
  • assess the possibility of bypass blood supply to the sites of myocardial ischemia( the presence of a network of small vessels, in addition to the main one).

The CAG is scheduled by a cardiologist or therapist, in an emergency or emergency situation - a vascular surgeon. The study is conducted by an X-ray or endovascular surgeon.

Indications for the procedure

Depending on the clinical situation and timing, the examination of the arteries of the heart muscle can be:

  • planned( up to 6 months);
  • urgent( within 6-12 hours);
  • emergency( against the background of the sharpest phase of blood flow disturbance in the myocardium).

In accordance with these terms, the indications for the procedure change.

Routine study of

  1. Clinical manifestations( pains of the stenocardial type), cardiac circulatory disorders, confirmed by pre-examination data( ECG, daily ECG monitoring, ultrasound).
  2. Postponed heart attack in young and middle age, especially its painless form.
  3. Before any operation on the heart muscle and large vessels in patients older than 40 years.
  4. Violation of the rhythm of cardiac contractions of the ventricular type( trembling).
  5. In order to clarify the diagnosis of pain in the chest, when the results of other studies, the cause is not clear.
  6. Annual examination of patients after heart transplant.
  7. Suspicion of the violation of blood flow in the heart muscle in people whose profession is associated with responsibility for the lives of others( pilots, drivers, machinists, etc.).
For daily ECG recording use Holter monitor

Emergency study

  • Strengthening of pain syndrome of stenocardial character in patients receiving hospital treatment and( or) the appearance of pain at rest, without physical and emotional stress.
  • Ineffectiveness of ongoing correction of angina pectoris against a background of large doses of drugs.
  • Deterioration of the patient's condition after surgical treatment for the violation of the blood supply to the heart muscle in the form of: the onset of pain syndrome, poor cardiogram results, and an increase in the level of "infarct-enzymes"( troponin, KFK, LDG).
In the blood, doctors can draw definite conclusions about myocardial infarction

An emergency study of

CAG is performed with any coronary syndrome in the acute phase, it is divided into two main types:

Types of acute cardiac muscle flow disorders Typessuch violations
Acute myocardial infarction Without, or with ST segment elevation according to ECG

Established only on the basis of increase in "infarct-enzymes"

According to the "late"( over 6-12 hours) ECG

Unsustainable angina( pain without connection with the load) Recurring attacks( recurrent)

Prolonged attack( prolonged or prolonged)

Resistant to treatment( refractory)

Preparation and procedure of

General principles of

The study is conducted only in a hospital, in a specializedIn addition to anesthesia and radiology equipment, there are all kinds of devices for monitoring vital signs( continuous ECG monitoring inall leads, control of pulse and pressure, oxygen saturation of blood).

How to prepare for the procedure and what to do after it

  • Complete elimination of eating food and water for 6-8 hours before the procedure.
  • If necessary, shave the artery puncture areas.
  • 30 minutes prior to the study, intramuscular administration of medications for sedation( sedation) and for the prevention of allergic reactions.
  • After the procedure, intravenous injection of physiological solution with a total volume of up to 1 liter in order to accelerate the removal of the contrast agent.
  • When puncture the femoral artery within 12 hours after the study requires a strict bed rest.

The procedure itself of the procedure

  1. After skin treatment with an antiseptic solution, an anesthetic of the artery puncture site( inguinal fold, wrist, elbow or subclavian area) is performed.
  2. A needle is inserted into the vessel, a special catheter is conducted through it and under the control of the X-ray, it is advanced inside the vessels until the beginning of the heart arteries.
  3. A contrast drug is injected into the catheter, it fills all the vessels, allowing them to be evaluated.
  4. If there were no complications during the CAG, no surgical treatment is required, the procedure takes about 15 minutes.
  5. Place a tight bandage on the vessel in the puncture zone for a day.
Also in addition to the femoral artery, the catheter can be inserted into the radial artery on the arm of the

. What changes are seen in the

study
Type of coronarography Changes
Planned Narrowing or ulceration of arteries against atherosclerotic changes

Blood clots in the vessels of the heart

Pathological spasm of the coronary arteries

Anatomical changes in the vasculature( passage of vessels in the myocardium, developmental defects)

Emergency Same disorders,as in a planned study, but with signs of an initial decompensation of the blood flow in the cardiac muscle( significant stenosis, spasms, or almost complete overlapping of the lumen of the vesselthrombus)

The presence of bypass blood supply and its functionality in maintaining normal blood flow to the affected area of ​​the heart muscle

Emergency Vessel with full or almost complete lumen overlap

Arterial change length

Myocardial infarction area

Emergency and emergency coronary angiography in most casesincludes not only diagnostics, but also surgical treatment of the arterial blood flow disturbance in the cardiac muscle( stentingand in the artery or widening of its lumen with a balloon).

To install the stent, a balloon is pumped, which straightens it inside the artery and in this position it remains. The balon is taken out.

Contraindications

  • acute and chronic failure of kidney function with a creatinine level of more than 140-150 mmol / l;
  • intolerance of contrast agent and( or) preparations for local anesthesia;
  • peptic ulcer in acute period;
  • erosion of the upper gastrointestinal mucosa;
  • disorders of the blood coagulation system( coagulopathy of all kinds);
  • disturbance of blood flow in the brain structures in the acute period;
  • chronic or acute bleeding of any site;
  • early dates after extensive surgery;
  • terminal phase of an incurable disease;
  • significant reduction in hemoglobin( anemia);
  • acute phase of mental illness;
  • increase or decrease in the level of potassium in the blood;
  • severe concomitant diseases or their acute period, significantly increasing the risk of complications;
  • cardiac dysfunction during decompensation phase;
  • acute infectious diseases;
  • increase in body temperature to febrile values;
  • high blood pressure figures, especially with a poor therapeutic effect on the background of correction;
  • overdose of cardiac glycosides;
  • significant pathological changes in peripheral arteries;
  • infectious lesion of the inner shell of the heart muscle( endocarditis).

Absolute contraindications, especially to emergency and emergency procedures, no. All conditions or diseases can only be a relative cause in the refusal to conduct a study. With their presence, the decisive fact is a threat to life.

If a violation of the cardiac blood flow is more likely to cause a fatal outcome, the choice is made in favor of the procedure. On all possible options, the doctor informs the patient or his relatives( if the severity of the condition does not allow), and they make a decision.

By the time of the planned CAG, almost all contraindications can be successfully compensated or fully treated.

Possible complications of

Complications of
Acute myocardial infarction 0.1
Infringement of blood supply to the brain structures( acute or temporary) 0.2
Arterial pathology through which access is made( bleeding, clot formation or vasodilation) 1.6
Rhythm disturbances 0,4
Fatal outcome 0,1
Damage to the wall of the heart muscle, kidney damage to the contrast drug, allergic shock, infection of the puncture or heart zone Single cases

Factors increasingThe following risks are associated with the risk of complications:

  • acute and acute phase of cardiac muscle blood flow infringement( infarction);
  • symptoms of cardiac shock( critical low blood pressure, pulse rate and level of consciousness disturbance);
  • cardiac insufficiency with a decrease in the volume of blood outflow during contraction;
  • a pathological change in the main part of the left artery of the heart and( or) three or more coronary vessels;
  • violation of the structure of the heart, its structural elements and vascular vessels( vices);
  • high blood vessel pressure;
  • high blood glucose figures;
  • chronic lung diseases with respiratory failure;
  • increased or decreased body weight;
  • the age of the patient is more than 70 years.

Despite the risk of complications, conducting coronary angiography in conditions of acute impairment of blood flow in the heart muscle is a chance to save the life of the patient and save him from disability.

When deciding on a planned study, the doctor determines whether the risk is higher: from conducting a study or if it is not performed.

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